Saturday, 19 March 2022

FASHION: LONDON FASHION WEEK Roksanda FILA

 https://uk.fashionnetwork.com/news/Lfw-roksanda-erdem-paul-joe-and-preen,1380251.html

In a continuation of our innovative partnership with unexpected creative designers, we are very excited to announce the successful debut of the ROKSANDA x FILA collaboration at the Roksanda fashion show during London Fashion Week. The designs are a combination of parachute inspired leisurewear incorporating FILA’s technical high performance fabrics with Belgradian designer ROKSANDA’s signature oversized “duvet” shapes, creating a blend of feminine empowerment with pragmatic sports-style.
#ROKSANDAxFILA
















A season of empowerment on Monday, with shows by distinctive non-British designers: active professional élan at Roksanda; modernist cabaret femme fatales at Erdem and suffragette revival chic from France’s Paul & Joe. 
 

Roksanda Fila



A triumphant start to Monday by Roksanda, who combined graphic references to Irish artist Eva Rothschild with a brilliant collaboration with sportswear giant Fila into a great show.


Hard to recall a more exciting partnership of high fashion and active sports-style than Roksanda’s brilliant voluminous puffer coats and blankets; techy dresses and fantastic moon-boots. Definitely the must-have items for next winter’s après ski cocktails and soirées.
 
“Sports is so present today, all around us. So I wanted to combine that with elements of couture to reflect what I am about,” the designer explained post-show.


 










Presented inside the main hall of Tate Britain, which featured several large frame sculptures by Rothschild; their colors echoed in several looks within this fall/winter 2022/23 collection. In particular, one fabulous graphic patchwork, multi-hued gown that had a real wow factor.
 
Roksanda also extended her range with some classy overalls; multi-stripe at multi-angles jackets; magnificent gents’ coats with quilted in-lays; and black satin gowns with golden metallic bar inserts. Most everything was great in this performance, including the Dear Frances two-tone, patent leather boots.
 
One needs to be a tall lady to carry off Roksanda’s volume, but if you have the self-confidence then this style is tremendously empowering. Adding to the ethereal moment, the cast had graphic double line eyeliner, in some great work by make-up artist Miranda Joyce.
 

But, above all, this show will be remembered for taking the concept of a sporty collab’ to a new level.













ROKSANDA x FILA
As the original sports brand that daringly opened up sportswear views well beyond the sports field, FILA cultivates an innovative drive which naturally leads to unexpected collaborations and surprising couplings. The newest installment in this series of progressive trespassings is the collaboration with ROKSANDA.  
A graduate of Central Saint Martins with a training in Architecture and Applied Arts in her native Belgrade, Roksanda Ilincic founded the namesake label ROKSANDA almost two decades ago, gaining accolades for her unique use of color, architectural yet flowing shapes, innovative use of fabrics and dedicated focus on craftsmanship. A woman designing for women, ROKSANDA keeps channeling a personal definition of beauty, creating pieces that reveal the wearer’s personality while providing a sense of shelter and refuge through their unique design. Colors and shapes reveal an ongoing dialogue with modern and contemporary art, as part of a multidisciplinary approach in which art, dance and fashion meet. 

 
ROKSANDA x FILA is  the encounter between two very different identities to create a new one, at once unexpected and authentic. ROKSANDA’s blown-up, dramatic shapes and vibrant colors meet the technicality and straightforwardness of FILA, blending an artistic sense of feminine empowerment with the pragmatism of sport-style. In devising the collection, ROKSANDA worked around her very own themes of shelter and protection, which she brought into the outdoors, in contact with the elements, according to the active FILA ethos. The collection revolves around humongous duvets that wrap the body allowing the wearer to seek refuge into their volumes, mixed with leisurewear inspired by parachutes incorporating FILA technical and high performance fabrics. A selection of leggings, t-shirts, sports bras and jackets grounds the offer, which is completed with padded bags and oversized moon boots. The dialogue between the respective identities carries over in the color palette: an idiosyncratic mix of tropic, porcelain, black and fluro orange with notes of chalk, champagne, butter, pearl, taupe and fluoro pink. 




 

Growing up in Serbia, I cherish personal memories of how much we all loved FILA pieces coming from Italy - says Roksanda - This collection allowed me to give a new point of view on such a beloved heritage: one that merges my shapes and colors with a sense of performance and the outdoors. The soft, enveloping message is perfectly timely, I believe”.

 










FILA‘s latest instalment is the collaboration with Belgradian designer ROKSANDA, a graduate of Central Saint Martins with a fashion label of almost twenty years with a reputation for unique use of colour, architecturally inspired flowing shapes, innovative fabric use and craftsmanship.
'ROKSANDA x FILA' is a combination of ROKSANDA’s blown-up, dramatic shapes and vibrant colours with the technicality and straightforwardness of FILA and it’s materials creating a blend of feminine empowerment with pragmatic sports-style.
The designs are centred around oversized “duvet” shapes mixed with parachute inspired leisurewear incorporating FILA’s technical high performance fabrics. Leggings, t-shirts, sports bras and jackets compliment the look along with padded bags and oversized moon boots in a fitting colour palette.
#ROKSANDAxFILA


THE SETTING





























BACKSTAGE


















Monday, 28 February 2022

LANGUAGES: TIPS ON MASTERING ANOTHER LANGUAGE from beginner to pros

 


Stephen Covey’s famous book The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People 

    polyglot Steve Kaufmann, founder of LingQ language resources, mentions seven habits of effective polyglots:


    BE PROACTIVE, go from passive to active take inititive. Find interests, find shortcomings and work on them.  “good learners are the ones who take the initiative”

    Be proactive and take the initiative.

    Begin with the End in Mind. Make a goal. “Try to visualize your goal, and work as hard as you can to achieve it. Start with the end in mind.”


    Begin with the end in mind, so focus on your goal.


    Put First Things First “be proactive and a model they can follow. You have to do the things that matter and do them “now”. resisting distraction, setting priorities and doing what you have to do to achieve your goal


    Think Win-Win. Language takes time, for all the failures try to see the small poisitves to keep you motivated. 


    Think win-win: all the time you spend learning a language, even if you struggle making sense of a difficult text, for instance, is time well spent, and with constant practice, you will improve.


    Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood. comprehensive. Understand and listen read culture and lang. don’t look at it as an awkward performance


    Seek first to understand, then to be understood: comprehension should be your first goal; focus on understanding by listening and reading a lot.


    Synergize synergy comes from combining the different language skills or tasks, in order to progress more quickly in all of them. Reading = culture & vocab & pronunciation. Review listen and speak to those that are new and difficult. Writing helps prep for speaking. 


    Synergise by combining different language skills or tasks and you will progress more quickly in all of them.

    Sharpening the Saw success in language learning requires a solid vocabulary through listening readin. Review and practise grammar to recognise patterns. 


    Sharpen the saw. In other words, work on the basics, such as developing your vocabulary and your grammar, not necessarily to see immediate results, but to prepare for the future.


    https://blog.thelinguist.com/habits-effective-language-learners/


    POLYGLOTS

    authors of the FluentU blog discuss the Gems of Wisdom from 10 of the Best polyglots.


    Learn from a child through listening even when in the womb. 

    Can learn language from any age as brain is language instinctive 

    Use available resources. Listen read online courses videos etc. 

    Go to the country and pracitse. Learn the culutre. Immerse yourself. 

    Create a good language and study routine. 

    Practise practise practise daily. Set goals. repetition. 

    Prepare mini speeches, pattern for common topics and answers. Speak in sentences rather than 1 short sentence

    Use all your senses to learn 

    Make mistakes and learn from them . 


    1. Don’t use your L1 for one hour every day.
    2. Memorise new vocabulary in meaningful context, and use a Spaced Repetition System to learn vocabulary.
    3. Make mistakes.
    4. Learn prefabricated chunks of language.
    5. Immerse yourself in the language you are learning.
    6. Identify patterns in the language.
    7. Don’t cram, but learn the language every day, from 15 minutes to one hour.
    8. Be consistent.
    9. Use material that you can understand (‘Comprehensible Input’).
    10. Don’t think of language as something to be conquered but as something to be enjoyed.



    tips:

    1) Listen to the audio material.

    2) Practice pronouncing the words and speaking the dialogue.

    3) Read the materials with audio, and then without audio

    4) Repeat numbers 1-3 several times over several days.

    5) Translate the dialogues into English (or your first language).

    6) Translate your English translations back to the original target language


    How do the languages differ how are they similar? use what you know to your advantage but even better ask what you don't know about and practise more to improve 


    https://www.fluentu.com/blog/how-polyglots-learn-language/



    TED TALK TIPS

     TED translators advice


    https://blog.ted.com/how-to-learn-a-new-language-7-secrets-from-ted-translators/


    1. Get real (start with a simple, attainable goal).
    2. Make language learning a lifestyle change by finding a language habit that you can follow consistently.
    3. Play house with the language, using every opportunity to get exposed to the language.
    4. Let technology help you out: reset the language on your phone, change the language on your browser or use intelligent flashcards for memorising vocabulary.
    5. Think about language learning as a gateway to new experiences, doing the fun things you want to do anyway but turning them into language-learning opportunities.
    6. Make new friends who speak your L2, nearby or online.
    7. Do not worry about making mistakes.

    Sunday, 27 February 2022

    ART - BUND 1 ART MUSEUM from Monet Bonnard to Matisse

     https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202111/27/WS61a17e14a310cdd39bc77df9.html


    https://www.247tickets.com/t/from-monet-bonnard-to-matisse








    MONET




    Oscar-Claude Monet  1840 –  1926) was a French painter and founder of impressionist painting who is seen as a key precursor to modernism, especially in his attempts to paint nature as he perceived it. through impressionism's philosophy of expressing one's perceptions before nature, especially as applied to outdoor landscape painting






    Exhibition title: From Monet and Bonnard to Matisse - The Great Exhibition of French Modern Art
    Source: Bemberg Foundation (France)
    Number of exhibits: 80





    LEPINE


    Stanislas Victor Edouard Lépine (October 3, 1835 – September 28, 1892) was a French painter who specialized in landscapes, especially views of the Seine.





    Bund One Art Museum, 2/F, No.1 Zhongshan East Road, Shanghai 


     







    BONNARD






    PICASSO



    RAOUL DUFY 
    Raoul Dufy (French: [ʁa.ul dy.fi]; 3 June 1877 – 23 March 1953) was a French Fauvist painter. He developed a colorful, decorative style that became fashionable for designs of ceramics and textiles, as well as decorative schemes for public buildings. 


    http://www.artnet.com/artists/raoul-dufy/















    SIGNAC


    Paul Signac, 1863-1935, was a French painter who, along with Georges Seurat, developed the technique called pointillism.